Saturday, April 07, 2007

Thursday, April 05, 2007

The Rude Pundit

From The Rude Pundit...

4/5/2007
Why Ann Coulter Is a C***, Part 3741 (Darfur Edition):
Because in her latest "column" (if by "column," you mean, "the s*** swirls and coloring book scribbles of a deranged, spasmodic demi-infant"), she actually says that Darfur is "a country from which no one anticipates terrorism anytime in the next millennium." It is the kind of statement, published in hundreds of newspapers and websites, gleefully repeated by troglodytes with no actual opinion to call their own, that ought to have a person permanently banned from all writing and speaking gigs unless they involve a wooden box and a street corner. While we shouldn't give a f*** about the context of such a blatantly bats*** nutzoid statement, Coulter was saying that Democrats would rather invade Darfur to stop the genocide than invade Iraq. Did that make a difference? Not really.

Let's do this quickly, shall we? Darfur - not a "country." It's part of Sudan. Sudan gave al-Qaeda the support - in allowing terrorist training camps there, among other things - to carry out the attack on the USS Cole in 2000. Osama bin Laden once had headquarters in Khartoum. There is no doubt that Sudan is deeply enmeshed in terrorist financing and other activities.

Leaving out that any editor worth a happy monkey f*** should have caught the error in Darfur being called a "country" in a nationally-syndicated column, it truly boggles the f****** mind, as it always does, as to why this ridiculous clown of a c*** beast is allowed to f*** her babblings into the air.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Thai King p-o'ed at this?

From USA Today...

The Thai government blocked access to the popular YouTube video website Wednesday saying a short film it features insults the country's beloved monarch.

Blocking access to YouTube was part of the military-installed government's move to shut down any websites deemed insulting to the king, and authorities will crack down on more, said Sitthichai Pookaiyaudom, the minister of information and technology.